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00000 Health Reform Implementation: What Communities Need to Know Xiaoyi Huang, JD Assistant Vice President for Policy, NAPH April 16, 2011 National Association.

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Presentation on theme: "00000 Health Reform Implementation: What Communities Need to Know Xiaoyi Huang, JD Assistant Vice President for Policy, NAPH April 16, 2011 National Association."— Presentation transcript:

1 00000 Health Reform Implementation: What Communities Need to Know Xiaoyi Huang, JD Assistant Vice President for Policy, NAPH April 16, 2011 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

2 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems (NAPH):  For 30 years has advocated for safety net hospitals and health systems  NAPH.....  Represents 140 hospitals with a shared mission—access for all  Effectively advocates at the federal level on issues of concern to safety net hospital systems  Conducts research and shares innovations on health system changes at member hospitals  Communicates value of the safety net to policymakers and the public 1National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

3 2 Some Major Accomplishments of NAPH  Secured Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) funding for safety net hospitals  Stopped billions of dollars in Medicaid cuts  Secured a seat at the table for safety net providers for the development of quality measures  A voice for safety net providers in the health reform debate 2National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

4 33 Disproportionate Share of Care to the Uninsured Source: Analysis of NAPH Hospital Characteristics Survey, FY 2009. NAPH hospitals represent only 2 percent of the acute care hospitals in the nation, but provide 20 percent of the uncompensated care. National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

5 How do our hospitals serve their communities?  One-third of all outpatient visits  One out of four emergency room patients  One out of five babies born  40 percent of all Level I trauma centers  60 percent of burn care beds  One fifth of uncompensated care  Train one quarter of US physicians 4National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

6 Percentage of Services Provided by NAPH Members in the 10 Largest U.S. Cities, 2009 Source: Analysis of AHA Annual Survey of Hospitals, 2009. 5

7 Outpatient Visits to Safety Net Providers, 2009 This data from FY 2009 represents 1,131 community health centers that received HRSA Bureau of Primary Health Care grants and the 92 public hospitals that participated in the NAPH Hospital Characteristics Survey. Source: Analysis of NAPH Hospital Characteristics Survey, 2009 and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), Uniform Data Set (UDS), 2009. 6 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

8 Source: Analysis of NAPH Hospital Characteristics Survey, 2009 Outpatient Visits and Discharges at NAPH Member Hospitals and Health Systems, by Payer Source, 2009 7National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

9 Source: Analysis of NAPH Hospital Characteristics Survey, 2009 and AHA Hospital Statistics, 2009. Hospital Margins, 2009 8National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

10 Health Reform National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems9

11 Expands Coverage and Access  Medicaid Expansion  State Health Insurance Exchanges  32 million Americans covered by 2019  94% of non-elderly US citizens  92% covered if undocumented included  23 million left uninsured  Roughly 8 million undocumented immigrants What’s in the Affordable Care Act? 10National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

12 How will coverage look by 2019? CBO estimates:  Medicaid/CHIP : 16 million new enrollees  Exchange Plans : 29 million  24 million individuals receiving subsidies  5 million via employers  Employer Coverage : 3 million fewer  6-7 million gain coverage who do not have it today  8-9 million lose coverage who have it today  1-2 million buy coverage via exchange rather than employer 11National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

13 Source: Buettgens, Matthew and Mark A. Hall, “Who Will Be Uninsured After Health Insurance Reform?” Urban Institute, March 2011. Percent of Uninsured Adults Eligible for Medicaid or Exchange Subsidies National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems12

14 Current U.S. Coverage Current U.S. Nonelderly Uninsured by FPL Current U.S. Health Insurance Coverage 2008 U.S. Data, from The Kaiser Family Foundation, “State Health Facts: Health Coverage & Uninsured” Eligible for Medicaid Expansion Eligible for Subsidies in Exchange 13 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

15 Remaining Uninsured Who are they?  Undocumented immigrants  Those cycling on and off coverage  Exempt from penalties  Financial hardship, religious objections, American Indians, without coverage for 8% of income, income below the tax filing threshold  Those who accept penalties 14 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

16 Source: Buettgens, Matthew and Mark A. Hall, “Who Will Be Uninsured After Health Insurance Reform?” Urban Institute, March 2011. Distribution of Nonelderly Uninsured Adults Under the ACA National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems15

17 Medicaid Expansion National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems16

18 Medicaid Expansion (Pre-2014) States may voluntarily “phase-in” coverage to 133% FPL  Guidance released (April 9, 2010)  Regular FMAP (not ARRA enhanced)  Cannot cover higher income before lower income  No asset test  Benchmark or benchmark-equivalent coverage  Only states with existing state-funded coverage likely to take advantage of this option  Budget neutrality implications for waiver states 17 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

19 Medicaid Expansion  Medicaid maintenance of effort (MOE) until 2014 (2019 for children)  Expands Medicaid to non-elderly at or below 133% FPL (2014)  Reduce state-by-state variation in eligibility  Include childless adults under 65  Benchmark coverage or benchmark-equivalent coverage that at least meets Exchange plans’ minimum essential health benefits  Benefits flexibility guidance issued April 30  Hospitals participating in the Medicaid program will be permitted to make presumptive eligibility determinations (2014) 18 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

20 Medicaid Expansion  Feds pay 100% to cover new eligible (2014-2019)  Phases down to 90% (2020-beyond)  Expansion states (already covering parents and childless adults up to 100% FPL) receive phased-in federal assistance for non-elderly, non-pregnant, childless adults up to 133% (2014-2019)  90% federal funding for these populations in 2020  Restricts states from requiring political subdivisions to pay a greater percentage of non-federal share, but permits voluntary increases 19 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

21 Medicaid Expansion Key Questions to Consider:  How many uninsured patients below 133% FPL are in your community?  How will Medicaid expansion impact your community?  Will option to expand early impact your community?  How can you help with enrollment, outreach, and education efforts? 20 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

22 State-based Exchanges Who is in the exchange?  Initially small business (50-100 employees) employees and individuals  In 2017, open to businesses with more than 100 employees Premium credits and cost sharing subsidies for individuals between 133-400% FPL (2014)  100% FPL for those ineligible for Medicaid (5 yr bar)  Used to purchase insurance via exchange  Caps premiums at 2%-9.5% of income  Assistance with out-of-pocket costs 21 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

23 Exchange Subsidies *Single adults, based on 2009 HHS poverty guidelines 22National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

24 State-based Exchanges Key Questions to Consider:  How many uninsured patients above133% FPL are in your community?  How will coverage through the exchanges impact your community?  How can you help with enrollment, outreach, and education efforts? 23 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

25 Employer Coverage Small Business:  Tax credits (beginning 2010)  Business must contribute 50% of employee premium  Eligible if under 25 employees and wages under 50K  Full credit available for businesses with 10 or fewer employees and wages under 25K  Covers 35% of premium contribution (2010-2013)  Cover s 50% of premium contribution (2014-2019) Over 50 employees:  Grandfather Policy: those that like current plan keep it  No employer mandate. But, penalties for companies with employees eligible for premium exchange subsidies  Free Choice Vouchers: For employees below 400% FPL where premium is 8-9.8% of income. Employer must offer voucher to be used in Exchange. 24 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

26 CHIP  Extends current CHIP reauthorization thru Sept. 30, 2015  Requires states to maintain income eligibility levels for currently eligible children until Sep. 30, 2019  Federal matching rate for CHIP is increased by 23 percentage points (2015-2019)  CHIP-eligible children not able to enroll due to federal allotment caps will be eligible for public subsidies in the state exchange (2014)  Simplifies enrollment process and coordination with state health insurance exchanges 25 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

27 Opportunities for Communities: Stimulating Health System Changes 26 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

28 Opportunities for Communities  Workforce/Training  Community Health Centers  Community Transformation Grants  Medicaid health homes  National Diabetes Prevention Program  Community health teams to support medical home model  Uninsured access demonstration  Community Needs Assessment 27 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

29 Workforce National Health Care Workforce Commission (§5101)  Develop a national workforce strategy  Annual recommendations to Congress and the Administration concerning national workforce priorities, goals, and policies 28 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

30 Workforce  HHS plans to use some Prevention and Public Health Fund money (§4002) to support workforce initiatives  $500 million for FY 2010  $750 million for FY 2011  $1 billion for FY 2012  $1.25 billion for FY 2013  $1.5 billion for FY 2014  $2 billion each for FYs 2015 on  For PHSA prevention, wellness, and public health activities, including: prevention research, health screenings, and other initiatives 29 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

31 Workforce  Of the $500 million for FY 2010, HHS to use $250 million for primary care workforce development  $168 million for training new primary care physicians (see next slide regarding grant announcement)  $32 million for new physician assistants  $30 million for nursing students to attend full-time  $15 million for 10 nurse-managed health clinics  $5 million for innovative state strategies to expand their primary care workforce 30 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

32 Workforce  $1.5 billion appropriated for the National Health Service Corps (NHSC) for FYs 2011-2015 (§10503)  Builds on ARRA’s $300 million investment in the NHSC  Detailed implementation plan can be found here: http://www.hhs.gov/recovery/reports/plans/nhsc.pdf http://www.hhs.gov/recovery/reports/plans/nhsc.pdf  Expected to result in an increase of more than 12,000 additional primary care physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants by 2016 31 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

33 Community Health Centers  Community Health Center Fund established for expanded and sustained national investment in community health centers. $11 billion from 2011-2015  Establishes prospective payment system for Medicare-covered services furnished by FQHCs  Qualified teaching health centers (FQHCs and others) are eligible for GME payments for operating primary care residency programs 32National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

34 Community Transformation Grants  Competitive grant program  For State and local governmental agencies and community-based organizations  Implement, evaluate, and disseminate evidence-based community preventive health activities to address chronic disease and health disparities 33 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

35 Medicaid Health Homes  States can allow Medicaid beneficiaries with chronic conditions to select a “health home” consisting of a designated provider or a team of professionals  States make Medicaid payments to “health home” using state methodology approved by HHS  State option begins Jan 1, 2011 34 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

36 National Diabetes Prevention Program  Establish a network of evidence-based lifestyle intervention programs for those at high risk of developing type 2 diabetes  Carry out community-based prevention activities, training, outreach, and evaluation 35 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

37 Community Health Teams 36 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems  Program to provide grants to or enter into contracts with eligible entities to establish community-based interdisciplinary, interprofessional teams to support primary care practices  Communities can partner with the state designated agency to ensure that the agency’s health care delivery integrates existing community resources and services

38 Uninsured Access Demonstration 37 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems  3-year demonstration to provide access to comprehensive health care services to the uninsured  State-based, nonprofit, public-private partnerships in up to 10 states  $2 million per state

39 Community Needs Assessment  Applies to all tax-exempt hospitals 501(c)(3)  At least once every three years  Adopt an implementation strategy that must be disclosed on the hospital’s 990  Adopt and widely publicize a financial assistance policy  Tax of $50,000 for failure to comply 38 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

40 Opportunities for Communities Delivery System Transformation – Aligning payment with Quality  Medicare & Medicaid-Pediatric ACOs.  Reduce readmissions  Community-Based Collaborative Care Networks  CMS Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation 39 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

41 ACOs Medicare  Fee for service shared savings model  Groups of Medicare providers and suppliers can share in cost savings above a certain threshold if quality standards are met  Partner with community stakeholders by having a community stakeholder on the governing body Medicaid pediatric  To be determined 40 National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

42 Readmissions Community-based Care Transition Program  $500 million available; part of CMS’ Partnership for Patient initiative  Community based organization and/or hospitals with high readmissions rates can apply for funding to improve care transition National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems41

43 Community-Based Collaborative Care Networks  Grant program for safety net providers to create collaborative care networks to provide low-income patients with comprehensive coordinated care National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systemsc42

44  Design, implement, test, evaluate and expand payment models & methodologies under Medicare, Medicaid, & CHIP that foster patient ‐ centered care, improve quality, & reduce the cost of care.  $10 billion for FY2011-FY2019 Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems

45 Questions? For more information about NAPH visit www.naph.org.www.naph.org Or contact: Xiaoyi Huang, JD Assistant VP for Policy xhuang@naph.org 44National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems


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